Why This Woman Launched a Yoga Streaming Service For People of Color

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In 2011, Carla Christine was working as an electrical engineer for the Department of Defense and suffering from crippling anxiety. Her condition was affecting both her professional and personal lives and led Christine to self-medicate with alcohol, cigarettes, and hookah.

“Although a doctor prescribed me an anti-depressant for anxiety, it was without an evaluation,” she says. “A friend became worried and recommended yoga. I couldn’t see how twisting and bending could heal my body and mind, but I agreed to try it. It was the best advice because yoga has aided me in self-healing and self-study.”

Later, Christine solidified her interest by becoming a certified yoga teacher and launching the Yoga Green Book (YGB), an online wellness studio and membership platform providing access to unlimited yoga and meditation videos to transform your mental and physical health.

(Image: Carla Christine)

“Since YGB’s creation, over 1,000 people have accessed our online teachings,” says Christine. “Business is conducted virtually, which enables my husband and me to connect with other yogis of color worldwide and have location independence. We have traveled to more than 20 cities worldwide and currently live in Medellin, Colombia.”

Christine also found the courage to leave her six-figure salary job to share yoga’s transformational power full-time. We caught up with Christine to learn about her startup process.

Tell us about the market need for YGB.

With racism, trauma, mental illnesses, and diseases that disproportionally impact our community, tools like yoga are needed now more than ever. When I first started practicing yoga, I discovered how difficult it could be for yoga students to find and connect with culturally affirming teachers in their communities.

I created an online platform for yoga because it’s an encouraging entry point for those who are new to the field as well as a means for seasoned practitioners to continue to evolve their practice regardless of their location.

How did you know there was a market and audience for YGB?

There are other successful yoga streaming sites but it was rare to see a black yoga teacher on their sites even though I and other yogis had subscriptions to these sites. We can all benefit from holistic practices, so yoga should reflect our image and be available to us all.

I launched and advertised the site and a five-part beginner yoga series in a way that unapologetically portrayed blackness to see if there was any interest. When there were steady sign-ups, I knew there was a market.